Many individuals with schizophrenia continue to hear voices, have false beliefs, and problems with attention, memory planning and everyday functioning even with medication treatment. The process of recovery in schizophrenia involves treating the whole person. This study will test a new Multimodal Cognitive Treatment (Mcog). Mcog works around problems in attention, memory and planning by using supports in the home such as signs, checklists, and alarms to improve everyday functioning. Mcog also helps the individual to examine the evidence for their beliefs and to deal with symptoms like voices that are not completely resolved with medications. We will compare 4 treatments to determine if this combined approach improves both symptoms and functioning for individuals with schizophrenia.
The process of recovery in schizophrenia involves resolving persistent symptoms and improving functional outcomes. Our research groups have demonstrated that using environmental supports in the patient's home to bypass deficits in cognitive functioning in a treatment called Cognitive Adaptation Training (CAT) improves adherence to medications and functional outcomes in schizophrenia and that Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) decreases symptomatology and the negative effect of persisting symptoms upon individuals with this disorder. Data suggest these treatments have modality specific effects. Targeting both functional outcomes and persistent positive symptoms in a multimodal cognitive treatment provided in the patient's home is likely to have the most robust effects on functional outcomes, persistent symptoms and the distress caused by these symptoms for individuals with schizophrenia. We propose to randomize 200 individuals with schizophrenia taking antipsychotic medications to one of four psychosocial treatments for a period of 9 months: 1) CAT, 2) CBT, 3) Multimodal Cognitive Treatment (Mcog; an integrated treatment featuring aspects of both CAT and CBT), and 4) standard treatment as usual (TAU). Patients will be followed for 6 months after treatment is completed. Outcomes will be assessed at baseline and every 3 months. Primary outcome variables with include measures of symptomatology and functional outcome. We hypothesize that patients in treatments with CBT as a component (CBT and Mcog) will improve to a greater extent on measures of symptomatology than those randomized to non-CBT treatments (CAT or TAU)and that patients in Mcog will improve to a greater extent than those in single modality CAT. Moreover, we hypothesize that patients in treatments with CAT as a component (CAT and Mcog) will improve to a greater extent on measures of symptomatology than those randomized to non-CAT treatments (CBT or TAU) and that patients in Mcog will improve to a greater extent than those in single modality CAT. The potential public health implications of promoting recovery in schizophrenia through multi-modal treatments are profound. By integrating effective treatments the potential for synergistic improvement scan be assessed. Home visits can be costly. Maximizing the benefits to patients by providing multi-modal treatment on the same home visit is likely to improve a broader range of outcomes with minimal additional cost.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
178
The CBT manual to be used for the present study was based upon the work of Kingdon and Turkington (2005) and Granholm et al., (2005) a group-delivered CBT skills training). Available manuals were modified to improve ease of training and to better accommodate the delivery of the full CBT treatment in the home environment. Supervision will be provided throughout the study by D. Turkington and S. Tai world renowned experts in CBT for psychosis. Training will be held for 1-2 weeks annually and supervision will proceed weekly via SKYPE. All therapists will be certified prior to providing treatment for the trial. Sessions are conducted weekly by master's and doctoral level therapists.
CAT supports are established and maintained on weekly home visits by bachelor's and master's level staff. Regular supervision will be provided by the PI who developed CAT.
A manual driven intervention combining CBT and CAT. Weekly sessions delivered in the home focus on altering cognitive biases using CBT and bypassing cognitive deficits using environmental supports
Standard medication follow up and limited case management
Change in Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale Psychosis Factor Score
Combines scores on BPRS for hallucinations, unusual thought content, suspiciousness and conceptual disorganization. Mean score varies from 1-7 with higher scores indicating more severe symptomatology
Time frame: baseline to 9 months
Change in Multnomah Community Ability Scale
17-item scale assessing a variety of domains of community adjustment including Interference with functioning, Adjustment to living, Social competence, and Behavioral Problems. Higher scores reflect better community functioning.
Time frame: Baseline to 9 months
Change in Auditory Hallucination Rating Scale
Examines the degree to which hallucinatory experiences are negative, distressing and disrupt the activities of the individual. The scale above separates how frequently the voices are distressing vs. non-distressing, the intensity of distress when the voices are distressing, the loudness of the voices and the degree of disruption in daily activities in separate items.
Time frame: Baseline to 9 months
Change in Delusion Rating Scale
Delusional ideas are rated with respect to the degree of conviction, the amount and duration of preoccupation, the amount and the level of distress experienced and the level of interference with activities.
Time frame: Baseline to 9 months
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.